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Topic: Goldie, Charles


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In the News (Sat 28 Nov 09)

  
  DNZB / BIOGRAPHY
Charles Frederick Goldie was born in Auckland, New Zealand, on 20 October 1870.
Goldie's greatest publicity coup was in 1903 when Lady Ranfurly, departing wife of the governor, chose two large Goldie paintings as her farewell present from Auckland.
Goldie's popular fame was reinforced by frequent reproduction of his paintings in the illustrated press, and as chromolithographic prints, which have since become collectors' items in their own right.
www.dnzb.govt.nz /dnzb/Find_Quick.asp?PersonEssay=3G14   (1797 words)

  
  Charles Goldie - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Goldie was born in 1870 in Auckland, New Zealand to David Goldie (who would go on to be a mayor of Auckland) and Maria Partington.
Sir George Grey was impressed by two of Goldie's still-life paintings that were being exhibited at the Auckland Academy of Art (Steele's art society, of which Goldie was honorary secretary) in 1891, and he talked David Goldie into permitting his son to undertake further art training abroad.
Goldie was famous for his fine portraits of Maori subjects.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Charles_Goldie   (236 words)

  
 Louis J. Steele and Charles F. Goldie the arrival of the Maoris in New Zealand (1898). (The Cover). - HighBeam ...
Louis J. Steele and Charles F. Goldie the arrival of the Maoris in New Zealand (1898).
Goldie's training involved the copying of famous works from the Louvre, including Theodore Gericault's early 19th-century history painting The Raft of the Medusa-the compositional inspiration for The Arrival of the Maoris.
Goldie and Steele displayed their painting, which was on a monumental scale by colonial standards, first at their studio and subsequently at the 1899 exhibition of the Auckland Society of Arts.
www.encyclopedia.com /doc/1G1-80175803.html   (673 words)

  
 C. F. Goldie   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
Goldie was born in Auckland on 20 October 1870.
Sir George Grey was impressed by two of Goldie's still-life paintings that were being exhibited at the Auckland Academy of Art (Steele's art society, of which Goldie was honorary secretary) in 1891, and he talked David Goldie into permitting his son to undertake further art training abroad.
Goldie's work has been criticised as "racist", and certainly he held the Victorian attitudes he had grown up with that the Māori were a "dying race" and in many ways inferior to Europeans.
www.wozhidao.org /en/C.F._Goldie.htm   (681 words)

  
 Eggleston Family Line
Charles H. Eggleston was born on 24 March 1845 in Coldwater, Branch County, Michigan and died on 22 March 1911 in Thompsonville, Benzie County, Michigan.
Charles was a mason, a mechanic, owned a lumber mill, owned sawmill in Gilbert, Michigan and was a farmer [3].
Goldie Ellen Eggleston was born on 11 November 1902 in Thompsonville, Benzie County, Michigan and died on 04 September 1975 in Green Bay, Brown County, Wisconsin.
freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com /~hutch/EGGLESTON   (1538 words)

  
 John Leech Gallery | Artists   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
In these works Goldie represents his subjects in meticulous detail, his expertise and skill at rendering surfaces is evident in his representation of worn weathered flesh and is encouraged by his inclusion of props such as traditional carved boxes and taiaha.
Goldie's photo-realist style was based on 19th century French Academic art, which he learnt while studying at the Academie Julian in Paris in 1893.
Goldie restricted his figure painting to the studio in accordance with the academic tradition and added props in order to heighten the atmosphere of the past.
www.johnleechgallery.co.nz /view/early20thcenturynzart/charlesgoldie.asp   (803 words)

  
 Late Signatures of Goldie
The placing of Goldie's signatures appears to be determined only by the available space: they seldom cross the printed words or illustrations, but are penned in the empty spaces of margins, paragraph indentations and divisions, or in the blank frames to figures and headings.
Since Goldie's personal papers in the Auckland Institute and Museum cannot be released until his widow's death, it might seem we can only conjecture at the thoughts of this painter, born in 1878, trained in the nineteenth century academic system, and living and dying in an artistically conservative country.
It may be that Goldie, an old man in a century whose art he no longer understood, was, in his compulsive signing and re-signing of Ruskin's pages and in his marking of the passages he most approved, trying to assert the continuing reality of his nineteenth century vision.
www.art-newzealand.com /Issues1to40/goldie05.htm   (895 words)

  
 Charles Frederick Goldie
Charles Frederick Goldie (1870-1947) is one of New Zealand's most controversial and best-known painters.
Goldie continued to exhibit new works every year until 1919, though many were replicas of earlier paintings and some depicted sitters who had long since died.
From 1940 onwards Goldie was in failing health and he died at the age of seventy-six.
www.lairweb.org.nz /zealand/famous/goldie.html   (753 words)

  
 Charles Frederick Goldie - Historical Artist - Fishers Fine Art Auctions New Zealand   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
C.F. Charles Frederick Goldie was born in Auckland and educated at Auckland Grammar School where his art master was J.G. Trevithick and by 1885 had begun to win certificates and prizes at exhibitions of Auckland Society of Arts and New Zealand Art Students Association.
In 1901 Goldie paid his first visit to Rotorua, in 1901-02 Steele and Goldie were listed as partners in Wise’s, but possibly by then the partnership was beginning to break up.
Although Goldie made his name painting portraits of Maoris he did paint portraits too of Europeans, and painted a large oil of a Biblical subject.
www.fishersfinearts.com /new-zealand-fine-art/Charles_Frederick_Goldie-Historical_Artist.htm   (394 words)

  
 Trafford Publishing: Minishrinks   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
Whisked away under a cover-up claiming that he was the victim of a botched burglary, Charles is sent to a Government Psychiatric facility known as PSR to try and minimize the damage to the conference.
Charles' participation in the conference is paramount, he has gained the trust of all the other participants, and without him, any meaningful treaty will not be ratified.
Kristen Michaels, a Child Psychologist who once worked with Charles' son, is asked to go to PSR to see if she can assist in therapy of a teenage girl, the daughter of a Senator.
www.trafford.com /06-1076   (759 words)

  
 Charles Frederick Goldie - Robert McDougall Art Gallery Exhibitions Archive 1998
Goldie's subsequent attempts at more ambitious compositions, such as The Christ Child in the Temple questioning the Doctors, found by his parents, which was first exhibited in 1911, were regarded by most critics as weak and ponderous, and never received the public acclaim garnered by his portraits.
Goldie's later works reveal his unwillingness to abandon this popular formula, as even into the 1940s he continued to portray elderly Maori in traditional costume and settings, without taking into account the dramatic social changes which Maori had encountered by this time.
Goldie's portraits have always been held in high esteem by Maori, and, because of their importance as ancestral images, are regarded as taonga, or treasures.
www.christchurchartgallery.org.nz /Exhibitions/1998/CFGoldie   (1031 words)

  
 Mokomokai: The Documentary
Like LINDAUER, ROBLEY and GOLDIE their art in Maori society was ‘Old master, Classic, and Academic, after all they too learnt their craft in Wananga, taught to them by their Tohunga, their masters.
GOLDIE did a great service in recording the Maori of his day it seems that no one has done him a similar service.
GOLDIES artworks although fitfully on display, were usually found in the storeroom of the Auckland City Art Gallery.
www.digitalus.co.nz /mokomokai/goldie.html   (1068 words)

  
 Charles Goldie   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
Goldie was born in 1870 in Auckland, New Zealand to David Goldie (who would go on to be a mayor of Auckland) and Maria Partington.
Goldie was famous for his fine portraits of Maori subjects.
This has led some to argue that Goldie's work is tainted by racism but he remains one of New Zealand's most recognised and collectable artists.
charles-goldie.iqnaut.net   (237 words)

  
 Play will mine New Zealand's artistic gold   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
While researching a television documentary on Goldie, Hawes read that when the artist died hundreds of pieces of paper with his name scrawled on them were found in his studio.
Hawes says he was inspired to write about why Goldie did this, and the play explores the lead poisoning that led to Goldie's increasingly erratic behaviour and obsession with his signature.
Goldie's painting The Arrival of The Maoris in New Zealand will be on display at the Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tamaki throughout the play.
www.aucklandcity.govt.nz /news/council/200404/25/a15.asp   (197 words)

  
 GOLDIE, Charles Frederick, O.B.E. - 1966 Encyclopaedia of New Zealand
Goldie was one of a family of eight, and the second son of David Goldie, a well-known Auckland timber merchant, a former Mayor of Auckland and a member of the House of Representatives for West Auckland.
Goldie returned to Auckland in 1898 and shortly afterwards he collaborated with L. Steele in painting “The Arrival of the Maoris in New Zealand” which was exhibited in 1899 and is now in the possession of Auckland Art Gallery.
Goldie's life as artist falls into two periods — between 1905 and 1916, and between 1928 and 1940, for the long hours he worked, often from 6 a.m.
www.teara.govt.nz /1966/G/GoldieCharlesFrederickObe/en   (1245 words)

  
 Sophia of Moscow (near Toowoomba) by Paul Little | New Zealand Listener
GOLDIE, by Peter Hawes, directed by Colin McColl, Maidment Theatre, Auckland (to May 22); CLOUD NINE, by Caryl Churchill, directed by Edwin Wright, Silo Theatre, Auckland.
Thanks in part to his dialogues with Te Tuhi, this Goldie comes to believe that he understands Maori – the "dying race" he saw it as his mission to chronicle before it was too late.
Goldie begins to go mad when he is accused of using sensitised canvases and, effectively, tracing photographs to create his work.
www.listener.co.nz /default,1914.sm   (909 words)

  
 Art: from the University collection - The University of Auckland   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
Goldie was the son of a former mayor of Auckland, and named after his maternal grandfather, Charles Frederick Partington, who built the landmark windmill on Symonds Street.
Goldie was duly enrolled for five years at the cosmopolitan Académie Julian in Paris in the studio of celebrated painter of nymphs and nudes, William-Adolphe Bouguereau.
While Goldie is known for his depictions of Maori with moko, this portrait is one of the largest he ever painted.
www.auckland.ac.nz /uoa/about/news/publications/universitynews/issues/2006/15/art/art_home.cfm   (422 words)

  
 Definition of index.php?search=charles|rennie|mackintosh&limit=20&offset=140   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
In the same year, ''Tales from Shakespeare'' (Charles handled the tragedies and Mary the comedies) was...
Charles Stewart]]''' (or '''Charles Stuart''') was the brother of [[Henry Stuart, Lor...
Charles did nothing to prevent the move and, retiring to...
www.wordiq.com /knowledge/index.php?search=charles%7Crennie%7Cmackintosh&limit=20&offset=140   (557 words)

  
 ipedia.com: Charles Goldie Article   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
Charles Frederick Goldie was a New Zealand artist.
Goldie was born in 1870 in Auckland, New Zealand to David Goldie and Maria Partington.
He was named after his maternal grandfather, Charles Frederick...
www.ipedia.com /charles_goldie.html   (278 words)

  
 Charles Frederick Goldie Early New Zealand Artist   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
Charles Goldie is known for his portraits of New Zealand Maori chiefs (ariki) and women of rank (kuia).
Charles Goldie was born in Auckland, New Zealand, on 20 October 1870.
Below are some examples of his Charles Goldie's paintings of Maori men and women.
www.arikiart.com /new-zealand-art/charles_frederick_goldie.htm   (419 words)

  
 AEGiS-AIDSWeekly: AIDS and HIV Therapy: New guidelines developed for Pneumocystis pneumonia prophylaxis
Goldie and coauthors were able to determine the most cost-effective points to halt PCP prophylaxis, as well as the most cost-effective prophylactic agents, according to their report.
The corresponding author for this report is Sue J. Goldie, MD, MPH, Center for Risk Analysis, Department of Health Policy and Management, Harvard School of Public Health, 718 Huntington Ave, Second Floor, Boston, MA 02115, USA.
Permission to reproduce granted to AEGIS by Charles W. Henderson.
www.aegis.com /pubs/aidswkly/2002/AW020604.html   (658 words)

  
 Emerging Infectious Diseases: Louis J. Steele and Charles F. Goldie the arriv... @ HighBeam Research   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
Louis J. Steele and Charles F. Goldie the arrival of the Maoris in New Zealand (1898).
Louis J. Steele and Charles F. Goldie the arrival of the maoris in New Zealand (1898): Oil on canvas, 1380 mm x 2450 mm, Auckland art gallery Toi o tamaki, bequest of Helen Boyd, 1899.
Goldie's training involved the copying of famous works from the Louvre, including Theodore Gericault's early 19th-century history painting The Raft of the Medusa-the compositional inspiration for The Arrival of the Maoris.
highbeam.com /library/doc0.asp?docid=1G1:80175803&refid=ink_tptd_mag   (687 words)

  
 Children of William and Laura Wyant   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
Gorman (1885-1931) on November 29, 1903 with whom she had Edna E (1904) Regus Edward in 1905 and Ray Calvin in 1908.
CHARLES P was born in Blair Township on January 28,1887 and died October 31, 1963.
She married Charles Conrad (1898-1945) and had Geraldine, Charles (1918), Maxwell, William, Eugene, Donald, Regis (1915), Adam (1924).
hometown.aol.com /johnwion/history5ada.html   (469 words)

  
 Michael Hurst Now: Star-Times Review, Goldie (2004)
How odd that everyone knows Charles Goldie's name, yet we know so little about the man. His portraits of majestic Maori, resplendent in feathered cloaks and blankets, were already anachronisms when painted and the artist has shared their fate, frozen before his time.
Eventually he would be judged the country's finest painter, only to suffer from the whims of fashion before succumbing to an alcohol-fuelled madness that reduces the artist to poignant, endless renditions of his own signature.
Goldie's encounters with his subject Patara Te Tuhi (a delightful George Henare), become a clever duel of world views that in a testament to Goldie's strengths are as pertinent today as they must have been when the play was first produced 17 years ago.
michaelhurstnow.com /goldiestartimesreview.html   (389 words)

  
 Charles Frederick Goldie, 1870-1947 has 175 works listed in the Australian Art Sales Digest.
Charles Frederick Goldie was born in Auckland, New Zealand, and was educated at Auckland College and Grammar School in 1883.
Goldie's career began in earnest in 1900, the year in which he first presented a range of Maori portraits, which he continued to produce in distinctive kauri frames.
Goldie resumed painting around 1930, sending works to London and Paris for exhibition.
www.aasd.com.au /artists/artist_GoldieCharl.cfm   (650 words)

  
 Seems Like Old Times (Widescreen/Full Screen) Grapes Of Wrath: Seems Like Fate The Lessons of Love: Rediscovering Our ...   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
Goldie is in top form, Charles Grodin is so dry and wonderful and Chevy Chase should've never moved beyond this type of film.
It is a modern screwball comedy about a man played by Chevy Chase who gets mixed up in a robbery and tries to get his ex wife played by Goldie Hawn who is a lawyer to help him and he winds up hiding in her and her stuffy new husband's (Charles Grodin) house.
Hawn is happily married to Charles Grodin who happens to pratice law cause Chase is wanted by the law.
www.echinoidea.de /seems   (2367 words)

  
 Charles C thru Goldie BAUMGARDNER
Charles Clayton BAUMGARDNER was born on 29 Jan 1871 in Cabell Co, WV.
Charles Frederick "Brick" BAUMGARDNER was born on 1 May 1908 in Barboursville, Cabell, WV.
Goldie BAUMGARDNER was born on 13 Aug 1898 in Cabell Co, WV.
freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com /~keffer/donna/d4.htm   (1539 words)

  
 CDC - EID Journal Vol7No5 Cover
He encouraged his New Zealand-born protegé Charles F. Goldie (1870-1947) to seek further training with the cosmopolitan Académie Julian in Paris, where he studied from 1893 to 1897.
Goldie's training involved the copying of famous works from the Louvre, including Théodore Géricault's early 19th-century history painting The raft of the Medusa--the compositional inspiration for The Arrival of the Maoris.
The chequered history of its reception suggests that such paintings of "history," especially colonial appropriations of a Maori past, are likely to remain highly contested.
www.cdc.gov /NCIDOD/eid/vol7no5/cover.htm   (563 words)

  
 Stability of perpetuities, Charles M. Goldie, Ross A. Maller
Embrechts, P. and Goldie, C. Perpetuities and random equations.
Goldie, C. Implicit renewal theory and tails of solutions of random equations.
Goldie, C. and Gr ¨ubel, R. Perpetuities withthin tails.
projecteuclid.org /Dienst/UI/1.0/Summarize/euclid.aop/1019160331   (376 words)

  
 John Vantreese Small
Her children were Nellie, Mary, Goldie, Charles, Philip, Ray and Kibbie.
He is survived by his wife, Hettie, of the home, south of Sylvan; three brothers: William and Charles of Wilson and John, of Russell; and other relatives and friends.
Charles and Rose lived at Wilson, Ellsworth County, Kansas.
home.nycap.rr.com /smallfamily/johnvant.htm   (1616 words)

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